Bybit is staying in the festival lane. The crypto exchange said it will continue its partnership with Tomorrowland Brasil through the 2027 edition, building on a 2025 collaboration that pushed its card product into one of the most recognizable live entertainment settings in the region. The event is scheduled for April 30 to May 2, 2027, and the next phase of the partnership formally begins on March 30, 2026. Bybit is framing the extension as part of its broader push to connect digital assets with ordinary consumer experiences, not just trading screens and market dashboards. Bybit turns festival access into a card strategy The earlier 2025 partnership gave Bybit a fairly visible role on the ground. It offered Bybit Card presale access, on-site payments and branded activations, including the “Portal to the Future by Bybit,” which the company said drew about 45,000 festivalgoers across three days. That mattered because it gave Bybit something exchanges often struggle to show in the real world: direct consumer utility. Instead of crypto being discussed in abstract terms, it was tied to ticketing, food, travel and purchases inside a live event environment. For a card product, that is the point. Under the renewed agreement, Bybit Card holders are set to receive early ticket access, discounts on presale and regular tickets, savings on official merchandise and a range of curated on-site perks. The company also said there will be exclusive co-branded merchandise and selected complimentary offerings during the festival. A lifestyle play beyond the trading app Tomorrowland Brasil’s 2027 edition will carry the theme,
“Consciencia,” and Bybit is clearly trying to place itself inside that broader cultural moment rather than alongside it. Helen Liu, Bybit’s co-CEO, said the 2025 collaboration showed how crypto can move “beyond theory into meaningful, real-world experiences,”
adding that the 2027 extension will deepen the role of the Bybit Card across the full festival journey. Pre-registration for Tomorrowland Brasil 2027 opens on April 30, 2026. For Bybit, the message is fairly clear. If crypto wants to feel mainstream, it may need to show up less as a market and more as infrastructure people use without thinking too much about the machinery underneath.